Lightning Protection for Rotating Machines
- 1 June 1944
- journal article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers
- Vol. 63 (6) , 319-333
- https://doi.org/10.1109/T-AIEE.1944.5058942
Abstract
The high monetary value and low insulation levels of rotating machines make it necessary to employ special protection. A rotating machine can be conceived as a transmission line with distributed constants, the essential difference being that the machine winding is wound back on itself in the form of turns, which may permit high voltage across the turn-to-turn insulation. The installation of special arresters with low and consistent spark-over characteristics will limit satisfactorily the maximum voltage that can appear across the terminals. However, capacitors also are required which, in conjunction with the inductance in the line, slope the front of the wave and thus prevent pilin up of voltage across the turns. Present methodsl1-7 of protection, on the whole, have proved quite satisfactory. However, in view of the statistical data that have been accumulated in extensive lightning investigations,8-12 the recognition of the importance of providing good grounding for the line arresters, and the appreciation of the value of the inherently low discharge voltage characteristics of the deion arrester, it has been considered desirable to study this problem further. The more important results of this study are summarized here with the viewpoint of providing a simple and straightforward basis for machine protection which affords the increased protection and saving in installation cost and material that it was found possible to achieve. Although the protection required at the machine and in the line are mutually interdependent, it is possible to resolve the suggestions for protection into the four following categories: A.Keywords
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